Next is Now.

July 1, 2010

AMERICAN GREED

Federal health officials pushed five vaccine manufacturers to quickly produce a vaccine. They wanted a lot of it. About a quarter of the swine flu vaccine produced for the U.S. public has expired — meaning that a whopping 40 million doses worth about $260 million are being written off as trash. Why produce so much? The problem is greed. Corporate profits have become more important than honor and integrity.

June 20, 2010

50 Common Financial Mistakes

50 Common Financial Mistakes
Part of becoming a savvy consumer is taking the time to learn what you need to know to avoid getting ripped off.

Somtimes you don’t know what you don’t know until somebody tells you. The 50 common finanical pitfalls that can trip people up in life.
1. Not understanding the negative impact of compound interest
2. Being more concerned about the monthly payment rather than the interest rate!
3. Using payday loans
4. Not having a savings account (or paying yourself first)
5. Buying too soon—that is, buying something on credit instead of waiting until you have the money saved up
6. Not having emergency savings
7. Forgetting the extra costs of owning a car ….insurance, gas, car maintenance etc.
8. Signing up for cell phone monthly payments and getting stuck in a contract
9. Financing an education on credit cards instead of student loans
10. Becoming addicted to gambling, online or in casinos
11. Trying at-home business scams with high startup fees
12. Not saving early enough in life for retirement
13. Not understanding of how insurance works or what it covers
14. Not securing any insurance on your car or valuables
15. Not factoring in late fees, extra charges, and taxes to a cell-phone plan
16. Having a “get rich quick” philosophy rather than a “get rich slow” strategy
17. Lack of budgeting
18. Bouncing checks and paying for overdraft fees (These will eat you up!)
19. Paying ATM fees when withdrawing cash at a bank or ATM other than one at your bank
20. Following bad investment advice
21. Not knowing how to read credit card applications
22. Rushing into a buying decision without considering all options
23. Not knowing the financial consequences of DUIs, drunk driving, speeding, etc.
24. Making minimum payments on a credit card.
25. Having addictive and expensive habits or hobbies
26. Not knowing yourself well enough to know you spending weaknesses
27. Not comparison shopping
28. Not understanding vehicle’s trade-in-values or depreciation schedules
29. Not setting aside money for maintenance of a vehicle
30. Not taking advantage of an employer contribution to a retirement plan
31. Buying too expensive of a car
32. Procrastinating on making important financial decisions like saving
33. Piling on the credit card debt
34. Not reading a lease thoroughly
35. Signing up for an extended car payment schedule. > 5 years
36. Giving out your Social Security number on the internet
37. Trusting the perception of establishment on the internet or an e-mail
38. Giving out your bank account number
39. Answering a solicited request over the telephone or e-mail
40. Answering chain letters to make money
41. Not getting business promises in writing
42. Not understanding technology enough to know deception
43. File sharing
44. Not archiving or backing up data
45. Buying without considering the service element on big-ticket purchases
46. Entering into service contracts (extended warranties)
47. Not having adequate health insurance coverage
48. Not realizing that if the deal is too good, then it probably is!
49. Being afraid to ask for advice
50. Falling victim to telephone scams
IT’S REAL,WHEN IT’S REAL!

May 24, 2010

6 million gallons of crude have spewed into the Gulf.

Filed under: big lies,consumer protection,greed,mismanagement,profits — greedygreg @ 8:41 pm
Tags: , , ,

BP (formerly British Petroleum) has become one of the world’s most controversial giant corporations because of its involvement in a series of major environmental disasters and industrial accidents. The company has been the target of intense criticism for its role in the April 2010 explosion at a drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico that killed 11 workers and unleashed a vast underwater oil leak that has flowed largely unchecked for weeks.

May 16, 2010

misleading drug ads

Big Bucks, Big Pharma. The real war on drugs!

Currently the FDA relies on a few dozen staffers to review hundreds of pharmaceutical ads, brochures and presentations voluntarily submitted by companies or reported to the agency by drug industry personnel. 

The drug industry’s lobbying group said in a statement it supported the effort as “another step to help educate — and receive feedback from — health care providers about prescription drug advertising and promotion.”

The lobbying group, Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, represents most of the world’s largest drugmakers, including Pfizer, Merck & Co. and GlaxoSmithKline.

Drugmakers spend about $20 billion per year to promote their products in various mediums, ranging from medical journal ads and information booths at conferences to multimillion dollar TV campaigns.

About $4 billion of industry spending goes toward patient-targeted advertisements. Some drug industry critics charge TV drug advertisements encourage over-prescribing of medications by emphasizing the benefits and minimizing the risks.

May 13, 2010

War on drugs

Plan Colombia. $20 billion to fight the drug gangs in their home countries. In Colombia, for example, the United States spent more than $6 billion, while coca cultivation increased and trafficking moved to Mexico — and the violence along with it. $33 billion in marketing “Just Say No”-style messages to America’s youth and other prevention programs. $49 billion for law enforcement along America’s borders to cut off the flow of illegal drugs. $121 billion to arrest more than 37 million nonviolent drug offenders. $450 billion to lock those people up in federal prisons alone

May 9, 2010

Psychiatry: An Industry of Death

Psychiatry: An Industry of Death. The major pharmaceutical companies are big backers of the Drug War… It’s not that they don’t want us on drugs – they just want us on theirs.

May 6, 2010

Big Brother, Big Business

Big Brother, Big Business. In “Big Brother, Big Business”, CNBC takes a look at the companies behind the powerful business of personal information and the people whose lives are affected by it, including: a woman who lost her job due to mistaken identity; a man whose cell phone records were stolen by his former employer; a woman whose personal information was stolen from a company she had never heard of; a man who discovered his rental car company was tracking his every move. The documentary also looks at how the FBI, the Border Patrol, police departments and schools are using biometric technologies to establish identity as well as an inside peeks at social networks which  works solely to satisfy the requests of law enforcement for information about it’s  members.

March 3, 2010

Fed Wins Bank-Reform Battle

 Federal Reserve chairman aka(the pimp) Ben S. Bernanke  decided on what actions the feds wanted to take, and then invented the stories that the Congress and the public needed to believe to support the actions. The main cheerleaders for the feds are (Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, and Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., a Republican member of the committee} will reach a deal on financial reform that would give the Fed additional powers as chief regulator for consumer protection.  Mr. Bernanke set the agenda  and the rest of the players in congress job is to follow the agenda.

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